Jacob v. Town of Oyster Bay

73 Misc. 283, 132 N.Y.S. 657
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 73 Misc. 283 (Jacob v. Town of Oyster Bay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jacob v. Town of Oyster Bay, 73 Misc. 283, 132 N.Y.S. 657 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

Jaycox, J.

The premises in. controversy are a sandy,, gravelly strip of beach connecting a parcel of land known as East island with the main land of Long Island in the town of Oyster Bay, Nassau county. As the foregoing sentence would indicate, East island is not an actual island, but is a parcel of upland, connected with the main land by the strip of beach in question. It is, however, and has been for many years, popularly known as an island. Originally the only means of access to it was by way of this sandy beach. Later, however, a caitseway was built from the main land to another island near it known as West island, and still later the two islands were connected by another causeway. During the early times, between these islands and the main land was a low lying tract of meadow and that intersected by creeks. Later, by the building of the causeway above mentioned, these meadows have been converted into a pond or ponds. In the causeway are constructed tidal gates which open with the incoming tide, permitting the water to flow in, and close when the tide starts to flow out, thus imprisoning these waters and forming ponds. . The strip of beach in question is between the easterly of these ponds and Long Island sound. It is approximately half a mile in length and from 170 to 200 feet in width, and rises to 6 or 7 feet above high water mark.' It is washed by the tides on its north and south shores. Originally its south boundary was the meadows which are now covered by the waters of the pond.

The plaintiff claims to make title to the premises in three ways: First, that they are appurtenant to and passed as part of East island. S&cond, that they are included in the boundaries of and passed as a part of the meadows. Third, by adverse possession.

The defendant, the town of Oyster Bay, claims to be the owner in fee under a certain charter or patent made the 29th day of September, 1677, by Edmund Andros, then Governor-General of the Province of New York.

The plaintiff’s title begins in 1667 in seven deeds from the Indians to seven individuals who are the .predecessors in title of the plaintiff. One of these individuals, Robert Williams, by the same deed from the Indians, obtained title [285]*285to East island. In said deed the island and the share of the meadow land conveyed to Williams is described as follows: “A certain Island lying at the North Sea, and a small piece of Meadow, adjoyning to the Island, being the Eastermost of the two, comonly called Matinnicock Islands; as also foure Acres of upland, more or lesse, lying over against the said Islands, wth free comonage of Grasing and Timber, wth all Eight and Title in ye Seventh part of our undisposed meadows, fresh and salt, with Qreeke Thatch, wth ye benefitt of all Mineralls according to Law, wth the benefitts of the Oreekes and Coves, wth free Hunting, flashing and ffowling; The said Bounds beginning from Eackon Swamp, or the foure Eocks, lying in John Hnderhill’s Meadow, from thence west to Musketo Cove; with all meadows, Creeke Thatch, broken lands, lying and being within the said Bounds and Coves and my Proporeon of Meadow and Creeke Thatch, being the seventh part to bee alo ted me in the Cove, adjoyning to the Island, where I shall choose.”

The other shares of the meadow are described in exactly the same manner as the share conveyed to Williams, and it is that portion of these meadows lying south of East island which has been flooded and forms the pond heretofore mentioned and known as Dosoris pond. The title to the land under the waters of this pond has been the subject of an action tried in this court and subsequently appealed to the Court of Appeals. Dosoris Pond Co. v. Campbell, 25 App. Div. 180; 164 N. Y. 596. In that action it was decided that plaintiff’s predecessors in title had title to these lands under the waters of the pond under the same chain of title which plaintiff relies upon now to make title to the premises in question. It would, therefore, seem to follow as a necessary and logical conclusion that the questions involved' in the first and second of plaintiff’s contentions are questions of boundaries only. It is not plaintiff’s contention that he makes title under the conveyances from the Indians, or that title can be so made; but he does contend that these conveyances and the record of them, under the laws then existing, are some evidence that the grantees had complied with all the legal requirements and had obtained the neces[286]*286sary consents from the sovereign power, and that the patent from the then Governor-General to Williams made good title in him as to the whole of the island and as to his seventh of the meadows, and that, as to the other six-sevenths, the possession of one tenant in common was the possession of all, and that, therefore, the rights of the Indian proprietors had been legally extinguished and title to all the premises' described in the conveyances in question vested in plaintiff’s predecessors in title.- This contention has met with approval in the action above cited (Dosoris Pond Co. v. Campbell) ‘and the defendants apparently concede this. The grants to plaintiff’s predecessors in title being prior in date to the patent to the town, if title passed by such prior grants, no title was left in the Crown to grant to the defendant; and, in fact, the patent expressly excluded the particular propriety of any person or persons who have right by patent or other lawful claim to any part or parcel of land or tenements within the limits aforesaid.” This patent to the town was sufficient to vest -title in the town to all lands within its bounds which were not at that time the particular propriety of any person or persons who had right by patent or other lawful claim ” to such lands. Town of Southampton v. Mecox Bay Oyster Co., 116 N. Y. 1.

The first question, then, to be determined is as to whether or not the conveyances to Williams and others above mentioned included the premises. I am of the opinion that they did. The premises in question, as stated above, which the courts have found are conveyed and of which .good title is made under the chain of title now offered by the plaintiff, were separated from the sound by this strip of sandy, gravelly beach. The evidence shows that under this beach, or sand and gravel, are still found the meadow lands, -and that, at times of heavy storms, the sands are washed away and this meadow land is disclosed. I think. the situation here shown comes .well within the principle enunciated in McRoberts v. Bergman, 132 N. Y. 73—83. “A grant of a salt meadow separated from the sea only by a beach formed by the sand thrown by the waves upon the meadow itself, ought not, in the absence of evidence of the public reserva[287]*287tion or of a hostile grant to another, to be construed,, to use the words of tbe opinion in the case cited, ‘ to cut him (the grantee) off from access to the water over his own land.’ ” There was nothing' between this land in question and the sound but this beach; and,- to again quote from McRoberts v. Bergman, supra, The word beach denotes land washed by the sea, and in the absence of qualifying words, a boundary by the ocean beach extends to high-water mark. Trustees of East Hampton v. Kirk, 68 N. Y. 459; People ex rel. Burnham v. Jones, 112 N. Y. 605.” Within the rule -as laid down in those eases the description here would- seem to take the grantee to the sound.

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Related

In re the Acquisition of Title by the City of New York
127 Misc. 710 (New York Supreme Court, 1926)
Stehli v. Town of Oyster Bay
208 A.D. 728 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1924)
Town of Oyster Bay v. Stehli
169 A.D. 257 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1915)
Jacob v. Town of Oyster Bay
155 A.D. 913 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
73 Misc. 283, 132 N.Y.S. 657, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacob-v-town-of-oyster-bay-nysupct-1911.